Eye on the TV
'Cause tragedy thrills me
Whatever flavor
It happens to be like
"Killed by the husband"
"Drowned by the ocean"
"Shot by his own son"
"She used the poison in his tea"
And kissed him goodbye
That's my kind of story
It's no fun 'til someone dies
So I was wondering – are the militaries that are helping in this concerned at all about disclosing capabilities?
Like, by the fact that a Canadian (NATO) aircraft picked up some sounds at (presumably) 12,400 feet depth, giving away a capability that they are able to hear sounds at that depth? Or are people in this "industry" (submarine warfare) probably already aware of all this from decades of cat and mouse technology games?
That tweet did not state that they picked up these sounds at a depth of 12,400 ft, it just states "underwater noises". Could be at 10ft below, could be much lower.
I'd expect a tourist sub to have emergency tanks that can be emptied using simple mechanical means when the sub loses maneuvering capability; maybe even a dead man's switch that causes the sub to resurface. And I'd expect emergency resurfacing actions to release buoys with beacons. So my assumption is that the sub got crushed or is stuck in the wreck of the Titanic. Which means there is no help possible and they are lost already.
But maybe I wildly overestimate the sophistication of their rig?
I also don't understand why they wouldn't operate on a tether, but maybe that was too expensive?
12 comments
[ 5.1 ms ] story [ 40.3 ms ] threadhttps://youtu.be/h_TUP2vuaDs
Eye on the TV 'Cause tragedy thrills me Whatever flavor It happens to be like "Killed by the husband" "Drowned by the ocean" "Shot by his own son" "She used the poison in his tea" And kissed him goodbye That's my kind of story It's no fun 'til someone dies
Some children died the other day / We fed machines and then we prayed / Puked up and down in morbid faith / You should have seen the ratings that day
Like, by the fact that a Canadian (NATO) aircraft picked up some sounds at (presumably) 12,400 feet depth, giving away a capability that they are able to hear sounds at that depth? Or are people in this "industry" (submarine warfare) probably already aware of all this from decades of cat and mouse technology games?
Still, never know what the navy has in its bag of tricks.
But maybe I wildly overestimate the sophistication of their rig?
I also don't understand why they wouldn't operate on a tether, but maybe that was too expensive?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=29co_Hksk6o
I think this question got indeed answered in the video, as I would answer it with a "yes".
Have you seen the ballast setup where they have like metal tubes to release?